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Transcript
The World Economy
Chapter 17
Reasons for European
Expansion/exploration
1. Trade domination –route to Asian
markets
2. Profit motive – mercantilism
3. Raw materials/natural resources
4. Markets
5. Political power /empire building
6. Evangelical work
7. Cheap labor force /business
investment
What advantages allowed Spain and
Portugal to expand 1st?
• Portuguese leaders drawn to excitement
of Exploration and desire to hurt the
Muslim world
• Henry the Navigator funded exploration
• Spanish explorers had been in the Atlantic
since the 1400s
• Spanish wars against the Moors (Muslims
in Morocco) led to advanced weapons
Spain and Portuguese’s empire
Spanish and Portuguese Exploration
• Portuguese explorers • Spain pushes west
push down the west
across the Atlantic
coast of Africa
looking for a South
West passage
• Set up small forts as
they go
• Columbus discovers
new lands across the
• Vasco de Gama
Atlantic
discovers Cape of
Good Hope and sails
around Africa
Spain and Portugal: Conflict
• Rather than fight over territory, Spain and
Portugal appealled to the Pope for help.
• The Inter Caetera (“papa bull” or charter
issued by the pope--“Pope Alexander VI)
established a line of demarcation dividing
the world into Spanish and Portuguese
spheres
• 1494 The Treaty of Tordesillas moved the
line west to give the Portuguese access to
Brazil
The Line of Demarcation
Control of Exploration moves North
By the late 1500s, Northern European countries
got involved in Exploration
– Looking for North East and North West passages
• English Explorers: 1498 Giovanni Caboto (or
John Cabot)
• 1576 by Martin Frobisher (Canadian Artic)
– Protestant Reformation weakens papal power
(Kings can defy the Pope’s Line of Demarcation)
England and the Dutch
• Try to match Catholic holdings
• Joint Stock Companies better able to fund the
expenses of exploration and trans-Atlantic
trade than southern monarchies
I.
EAST INDIAN COMPANY
1. given trade monopoly by the gvt.
2. right to raise an army
3. coin money
• Although unsuccessful in gaining northern
passages to the Indies, they do settle lands
around the Atlantic
The Columbian Exchange
Mercantilism helped create trade patterns such as the triangular trade in the North
Atlantic, in which raw materials were imported to the metropolis and then
processed and redistributed to other colonies.
The Commercial Dominance of the
West
• Western Europe
dominates most
of Atlantic trade
• Merchant
countries gain
dominance
• Europeans set
up small trade
posts, but are
not interested in
setting up large
land colonies
(Spain in the
new world =
exception)
Imbalances in Trade
• England, France and the Dutch make
majority of profits
• Export expensive finished goods and
import raw materials
• Mercantilism: Economic policy in which
countries try to increase their wealth by
exporting more than they import
-import less
-raise tariff
-government support home industries
-limit manufacture in colonies i.e. cotton in India
International Inequality
• Dependent areas like Latin America and
Western Africa were not poor
– Silver mines in South America grew wealthy
– Commercial estates made money on cash
crops
– Some West Africans states grew rich on the
sale of slaves
– Most of the world has no effect
Is it really a world economy?
• No!
• Most of the world is not effected
– China is isolated, some trade but limited
interaction
– Most Japanese were forbidden to interact
with foreigners
– Mughals and Safavid could not compete with
European traders
– Most of Africa isolated due to geography
Expansionism
•
•
•
•
•
By the 17th century
European powers were
looking to expand
Mughal empire begins to
disintegrate
Spanish colonize land in the
Indies and Central and
South America
France trades furs in
Canada
England sets up coastal
plantation colonies
– “Early colonies in the Americas typically were
developed by small bands of gold-hungry
Europeans often loosely controlled by
colonial administration back home.”
1509-Vasco de
Balboa (Panama)
1528-Francisco
Pizarro (Inca
Empire)
1521, Hernando
Cortes
(Aztecs)
Spanish Colonies
• Islands in the Caribbean
– Cuba
– Hispaniola
– Jamaica
• Large land Colonies in central and South
America
– Gold and Land!!!!!!
British and French North America
• Back Water Colonies
British Colonies
• Settled land along the Atlantic
– Plantations in the south
• Religious refugees
– Calvinists like the pilgrims in the North East
French Colonies
• Along the Mississippi and into Canada
• Mostly traded furs
Dutch
• Colonized New York
• Mostly focused on Asian colonies
• Cape of Good Hope –Boers
Life in the Colonies
• North
America:
– Similar family
patterns to
Europe
– Slightly
higher focus
on children
– New
emphasis on
affection
Life in the Colonies
• Africa
– Small coastal
fortresses
– No family units
– Trade only
• Asia
– British and French
struggle for control
of India
– Mughal Empire in
decline
– Limited effect on
Indian people
Effect on Europe
• Economic Effects
– Average Europeans can afford luxuries like sugar
– Wealth goes into development of manufacturing
operations
• Diplomatic effects
– Wars
Effect on Asian
1. Unbalanced of trade--favored China.
2. China maintains a grip on trade as many European
nations tried to open the Chinese market—”wealth
to be made; lives to be saved;”
3. Opium collapsed the Chinese Empire